The first pic is rhododendron macabeanum, I have just been able to strike a cutting off this plant after trying for 2 years. I t will take a few years to get to this stage but worth the wait.
The second picture is a californian laurel that has been hidden in a thicket for a few years and has just come to light this year after I cleared the area. It took a lot of research to find out what it was but I found an old label in the rubbish when I was clearing the ground.
Both of these plants are in a very sheltered garden and I cannot remember coming across them before.
(http://inlinethumb37.webshots.com/5668/2595232960062644071S500x500Q85.jpg) (http://good-times.webshots.com/photo/2595232960062644071rYtoho)
(http://inlinethumb37.webshots.com/40740/2235696860062644071S500x500Q85.jpg) (http://good-times.webshots.com/photo/2235696860062644071eDVmqD)
I'm not usually a big fan of the rhododendron, but that is a very classy plant. Well done for your patience Ace!
Beautiful flowers on the first, well done. I have about six rhodo's that I have had in pots for about 10 years and are pot bound but I can't bring myself to bin them.
am i mistaken in thinking a bay tree is a member of the laurel family
Why do you ask Deb?
Laurus Nobilis, sweet bay, bay laurel, loads of names for the same plant. I think the Greeks used it as a type of crown. I expect the Romans did as well in their crown of laurels. Yes they are all related.
no particular reason gazfoz just showing off that ive been reading lol ;D
ACE are you going to have some lovely winding path back to the thicket with the laurel in it? It looks like an interesting setting for a different kind of garden.
ACE, how did you strike the cutting? I have a rhodie now in a pot that I discovered under a rampant choiysia. It has the most beautiful cerise flowers but isn't a happy plant. It's very leggy and sparse - basically just a circle of leaves on the end of the shoots. I suppose it was struggling to get to the light under the choiysia. I'd love to get a cutting going to get a healthy plant out of it.
Really you need a healthy plant to get a good result. I scraped a sliver of bark and pinned it in a pot while it was still attached to the main plant. So really it was layering rather than rooting a cutting.
Thanks ACE. I think I'll have a look to see if there is a healthy shoot to try layering. I'd really like to save it if I can - the blooms are so fantastic
The Romans took over the laurel crown (along with a load of other stuff) from the Greeks, so it was probably the same species.